Dionisy

Dionisy, (born c. 1440—died c. 1508), one of the foremost painters of the medieval principality of Muscovy, who determined the style of the last great era of old Russian art. Though he was celebrated during his lifetime as Muscovy’s leading artist, little is known about his life. Given the many contradictory accounts in medieval documents, relatively few works can be indisputably attributed to him.

Between 1467 and 1477 Dionisy was a junior craftsman on the team working on the frescoes of the Sobor Rozhdestva Bogoroditsy (Nativity of the Virgin Cathedral) at the St. Paphnutius of Borovsk Monastery. After 1468, at the behest of Joseph of Volokolamsk (a major benefactor of Dionisy and the founder of the Volokolamsk Monastery), Dionisy—together with his two sons, Feodosy and Vladimir, and the two nephews of Joseph of Volokolamsk—decorated the walls of the Uspensky Sobor (Dormition Cathedral), the main cathedral in the Kremlin. In 1481 Ivan III, grand prince of Moscow, ordered Dionisy—who at the time was head of the iconography workshop—to work on the iconostasis (the screen that separates the altar from the nave in Eastern churches) of the Uspensky Sobor. The famous treatisePoslanie iconopistsu (late 15th century; “Epistle to an Iconographer”), attributed to Joseph of Volokolamsk, was implicitly addressed to Dionisy and can be seen as a synopsis of the spiritual basis of Dionisy’s art, his reliance on the mystical traditions of Russian Orthodox Christianity, and the legacy of Andrey Rublyov.

It is possible that in his search for contact with the bearers of this tradition, Dionisy traveled after 1495 to the northern monasteries of Beloozero, a principality 350 miles (560 km) north of Moscow. There, in a single month in 1502, he and his sons worked on various projects, including the frescoes in the cathedral of the Ferapontov Monastery’s Sobor Rozhdestva Bogoroditsy. This was to be the only surviving testament of his monumental painting.

The outlines of Dionisy’s iconographic legacy are unclear, but one uncontested work of his authorship is The Mother of God Hodegetria (1482) in the Voznesensky monastery of the Moscow Kremlin. Bringing together the aspirations of Rublyov’s many disciples, Dionisy is the one who drew the most radical lessons from Rublyov’s style. The outlines of his figures are even clearer and closer to pure geometric forms, the facial features more abstract, the forms completely ethereal, the composition exceptionally balanced, and the colours remarkably light. This extreme abstraction seems to throw wide open the mystical depth of the icon.